For tropes from the live-action series, go here.
YMMV tropes with their own pages
- Abandon Shipping
- Alternative Character Interpretation
- Complete Monster
- Die for Our Ship
- Fandom Specific Plot
- Fanon
- Fanon Discontinuity
- Magnificent Bastard
- Memetic Mutation
- Moral Event Horizon
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Franchise as a whole
- Aluminum Christmas Trees: The use of Classical Elements as the franchise's basis for Elemental Powers seems like just a remnant from before the show's Eastern-inspired setting was finalized, but there are East Asian element systems similar to the classical elements, namely in Japan and Tibet.
- Base-Breaking Character: Avatar Kyoshi has become little by little this as the years have gone by. While she's very well liked for her role in the original show, to the point of becoming a Breakout Character in the comics, as time went on more and more fans have started to become disgruntled with all the praise and adoration she gets claiming her to be the greatest, most badass Avatar around while ignoring her faults. Then there's the live action series, where Kyoshi wound up getting the lion's share of the screen time out of all the past Avatars, pushing Roku from Aang's mentor to a side character present in only one episode, splitting the fanbase further as some are more than happy to see more of Kyoshi while others are annoyed with her hogging up the spotlight.
- Better on DVD:
- Watching one of the series on optical discs is a nice way to watch/rewatch the series in a marathon. It helps that each disc usually holds a movie-length set of episodes, helping one take in the story progression without interruption.
- This would later also apply to streaming, as the series being released on Netflix ending up causing the biggest Newbie Boom in the franchise's history since the premiere of its Sequel Series and lead countless new fans to discover the series by binge watching, a format that works really well for the show, given how much lore it has.
- Fandom-Enraging Misconception:
- When the show first came out in the 2000s, a golden era for anime-influenced TV shows, there was one unwritten rule: Never, ever, ever, call any part of this franchise "anime"; the universe was developed with anime stylings, yes, but it is a western cartoon. Fast forward to 2020 and it seems the opposite is now true, with Avatar even being considered an honorary anime in all but name. This is a reflection of the ever evolving popularity of anime and its strong influence in animation as a whole, with many people, including Avatar fans becoming less and less insistent that "anime" can only be Japanese and not itself a global art style and medium, similar to attitudes involving the Eastern RPG genre in video games. Still, there are many certain anime fans who find the franchise to be massively overrated and believe the only reason anybody would call Avatar the "greatest animated series ever" is because they haven't actually watched a lot of anime. There are also "anime elitists" who consider the franchise inferior simply because it is not Japanese.note
- Do not mistake it for James Cameron's 2009 blockbuster Avatar when it is brought up in conversations.
- For the love of Raava, DO NOT EVEN THINK OF pronouncing Aang's name as "Ahng" or "Ong" unironically unless you really want to know what an army of pissed off fans will look like when they're all in the Avatar state. Of the many things fans hated about the M. Night Shyamalan film, this pronunciation was one of them.
- Friendly Fandoms:
- In spite of certain sections of the fandom being vicious to anyone who calls the franchise "anime", the franchise has always commanded a lot of respect among actual anime fans. This is due to it taking influence from some of the most influential parts of Japanese animation, such as the works of Studio Ghibli. The franchise is regularly discussed casually among anime fans alongside their favorite series despite being Western-produced.
- When Walt Disney's Raya and the Last Dragon was announced, and the first promotional images and trailers were released to the public, a number of Avatar fans were quick to comment that it seemed very reminiscent of the series, due to its Southeast Asian-inspired "cultural hodgepodge" aesthetic, a band of heroes from disparate cultures, a conflict that was kicked off by the actions of one specific nation, and the presence of Mix-and-Match Critters (most notably Raya's steed, Tuktuk, who is based on a woodlouse, an armadillo, and a Pug). Amazingly, the producers of the film actually appreciated these comparisons
. - Fans of the franchise are also on very good grounds with the Steven Universe fanbase. Although different in both content and tone, all shows thus far nonetheless share a number of similarities (e.g., an All-Loving Hero protagonist, delving into mature subject matters such as war and trauma, characters with Elemental Powers, being animesque, etc.).
- Gateway Series: 2000's animesque cartoons like Avatar: The Last Airbender and Teen Titans (2003) are credited with helping foster interest in anime and anime-inspired cartoons in the West.
- Hard-to-Adapt Work: The Avatarverse is so fantasy-based that it does not work in live-action at all, forcing the live-action film to resort to Coconut Superpowers and often causing Special Effects Failure.
- Hilarious in Hindsight:
- A YouTuber posted news
that the next entry in the franchise after Korra will move to Netflix...as an April Fools gag in 2017. Jump forward to mid-September 2018/Summer 2020, and that's exactly what happened. - In "The Ember Island Players", Aang is upset about being played by a girl in the stage show. Guess who his next incarnation as the Avatar was?
- A YouTuber posted news
- Hype Backlash: Both shows have at various points been called some of the greatest shows in Western Animation ever made. Naturally, some disagree, and common points of criticism include divisive characters and the use of Deus ex Machina.
- The Problem with Licensed Games:
- Both shows have inspired dozens of video games for a litany of consoles and PC. Almost none of them are worth your time, being cheap tie-ins made with minimal effort and little budget. Even the resurgence of interest in the franchise in the '20s resulted in little more then skins for other games and Quest for Balance — a bit of shovelware that was quickly lambasted for having remedial gameplay and graphics that might have been impressive in the PS2 era.
- The only game with an actual positive reception (among fans, at least) was the Legend of Korra stylish action game made by PlatinumGames — and that game was delisted back in 2017, and never got a physical release. That's right; the only game worth getting is also the only game you cannot get (legally, at least).
- What Do You Mean, It's for Kids?: The comic books based on the show. While the show already had a lot of themes you wouldn't expect to see from a children's cartoon, ranging from abusive families to what growing up in a war does to a child, the comics went full in on the political themes that were only touched on in the show, spending a great deal of time exploring the realistic consequences of 100 years of war:
- The Promise explores the consequences of longtime colonization. When Zuko realizes that the vast majority of the colonies' population are second, third, fourth or more generation colonists who know no other life than what they have in the colonies and that it would be wrong to uproot them all and move them to a nation they've never been in, it brings him into conflict with Earth King Kuwei, who quite understandably sees them only as invaders who stole land rightfully belonging to the Earth Kingdom.
- The Rift and North and South both explore the darker sides of the industrialization that tends to follow wars. In The Rift, the industrialization of a small town has both caused them to build over an Air Nomad holy site, but also forgotten a festival meant to appease the spirits, and the spirits in question are pissed. Aang does eventually appease them, but general Old Iron thinks that spirits have no place in this world. In North and South, Katara and Sokka return home to find their old village turned into a city thanks to the aid of the Northern Water Tribe. While this does come with significant improvements in life standard, Katara worries that it will cause the loss of the unique Southern Water Tribe culture, especially since the NWT tends to act a lot like white saviors (except not white). The story does not reach any definitive conclusion to this, but shows both sides to be in the right. On the one side, the SWT has a unique culture that deserves to be preserved. On the other, the industrialization has improved the life of the south significantly, especially for non-benders.
- In Smoke and Shadow, newly minted Fire Lord Zuko struggles with how much power he should exhert to protect his people while avoiding becoming a tyrannical dictator like his father. When the children of the Fire Nation start going missing, people start blaming him for not doing enough to protect him, and the New Ozai Society terrorist organization gains traction by organizing militias to protect the people if the Fire Lord is unable to.
The original series
A-E
- Accidental Innuendo: "The Drill". Not only is the long stick like drill very phallic in appearance, but when the slurry overflows, it looks like a "climax" into the wall.
- Adorkable:
- Zuko's attempts to be a normal and friendly guy end up charming failures. Notably, he practices an apology to a frog, then proceeds to demand an answer. Or, he attempts to tell a joke he doesn't even remember, so he skips to the punchline, with ensuing embarrassment. But his social ineptitude being the result of his Dark and Troubled Past and his being a genuinely kind-hearted guy made him extremely beloved by the fandom.
- Aang may be a Physical God, but that doesn't change the fact he's still a goofy, smiling kid who has a ton of energy. His dorkiness really comes out during his interactions with Katara.
- Sokka's moments of over-enthusiasm are the farthest thing from cool, but still endearing in their way.
- Earth King Kuei also comes out at this, due to his oblivious behaviour, result of his sheltered upbring, and attitude towards his pet bear Bosco.
- Azula in "The Beach", jarringly exposing her lack of social skills.
- Ikem messes up his lines while practicing, gets scared by props used in the play he is in, absolutely ruins a Badass Boast by stuttering, and when questioned about his choice of weapons, he can only meekly say they are the only ones he has.
- Alternate Aesop Interpretation: "The Great Divide." It seems many viewers focus on the feud between the clans itself and Aang's solution to the conflict. However, from another viewpoint, the episode is a warning about getting caught up in arguments and controversies where there is no clear logical resolution because it's easier to align yourself with one of the groups. Both clans are telling different versions of the same story about a significant ancestor and don't seem to have any sort of evidence or documentation. Sokka and Katara find themselves weighing in on opposite sides of the feud because of which side of the story they heard first, and because of their views on how to adequately build tents in the dry season. This can also apply to the resolution of the conflict. Aang told a total lie to get the two to stop fighting; which DID end the feuding between the two tribes so they could focus and move past their long standing quarrel. A little lie helps if it avoids a worse outcome.
- Aluminum Christmas Trees: Given the Schizo Tech the series is known to employ, one could be forgiven for believing the drill used at Ba Sing Se was a made up futuristic invention (GanXingba labels it as being "invented in 20XX"). It turns out the drill is based on the very real tunnel boring machine,
invented in 1845. - Angst? What Angst?:
- It's implied that the Fire Nation guards — and possibly Azula — tortured Suki while she was in prison. Given her despondent expression in the Boiling Rock courtyard and her lack of surprise about a disguised Sokka barging in on her, there is evidence to support that theory. Even without it, her team of Kyoshi Warriors lost in a Curb-Stomp Battle with Azula and her friends to save Appa, and Azula in Kick the Dog mode not only separated them like prisoners but also took their clothes and makeup to impersonate them. That is one Trauma Conga Line. Suki doesn't get her Kyoshi garb back until the end of the series when the war is over, and she takes a lot of pride when wearing it. Despite that, she regains her spirit quickly when reuniting with Sokka, saying she knew he would come for her. Then she helps stage the successful jailbreak by taking the Warden hostage, without breaking a sweat. Oh, and she let Ty Lee, one of her former enemies, join the Kyoshi Warriors under the condition that Ty Lee taught them chi blocking and would be on her best behavior. Sokka wasn't as cool with the idea when he found out, for understandable reasons. A tie-in comic expands on her time in prison, where she was not only placed under solitary confinement but also gets sold out by a fellow prisoner whom she trusted. The experience does come close to breaking her, but a vision of Avatar Kyoshi inspires her to remain strong.
- Haru finds his father captured at the end of the Black Sun invasion. He and a ragtag bunch of survivors have to make their way to the Western Air Temple, in Fire Nation territory and knowing they're fugitives with little to no resources. While Aang is hiding his angst about the failure by taking Haru and the others on a tour, Haru seems really into it and not showing trauma at all.
- Ty Lee never gets over her fear of Azula, but handles a stint in jail relatively well. Ty Lee was afraid of crossing Azula or stepping out of line, and she ended up in Fire Nation jail when betraying the princess to save Mai from a would-be fatal attack. The last episode has her in Kyoshi Warrior garb, casually explaining that she "bonded with the girls in prison" and became one of them due to her chi-blocking skills.
- Anvilicious:
- The show teaches that nationalism, militarism, and imperialism will ruin both the nations victimized by it and the nation perpetrating it with all the subtlety a fantasy cartoon can. Sozin's initial attempts at "spreading prosperity" to the rest of the world by military conflict only leads to horrific suffering on a scale that disgusts him, and his descendants continue to use this excuse to justify conquest while ultimately only caring about becoming as powerful as possible. This degradation into militarism completely bankrupts the Fire Nation's culture and leads it to a diplomatic nightmare that Zuko will have to spend the rest of his adult life attempting to clean up.
- The second half of Book 3 repeatedly teaches the lesson that your actions have consequences through Zuko's attempts to earn the trust of the Gaang after trying to kill them. He had to plunder a forgotten dragon-temple, break into a supermax prison, and even help an assassination attempt on an elite soldier to get the Gaang to forgive him. In short, Zuko had to earn his redemption.
- Just because someone is your family does not mean you have to unconditionally love and obey them when they abuse you or make it clear they don't care about you. True family are the people who look after you, love you unconditionally despite your faults, and are willing to die for you. How does the show demonstrate this? By making the dad of a main character a faceless Dark Lord ruling a genocidal empire from a throne made out of fire.
- "The Great Divide." The tribes hate each other for very trivial reasons, and this is a Bad Thing. We get it.
- "The Painted Lady." The episode lingers on people eating hideous mutant-fish, a river covered in disgusting sludge, and an unambiguously evil Fire Nation factory to get across its environmentalist message. It also has Katara say the other half of the moral outloud, that inaction IS an action, and doing nothing while people suffer is outright heinous. Some saw thought this made Katara look a bit self-righteous and stubborn in this episode.
- Ass Pull: A lot of people feel the finale had two major ones. The first one with Aang being granted energybending by the lion-turtle is hotly debated as to whether it was or not, with the issue mostly being accepted in concept as it fits with the lore with the timing of its implementation and lack of foreshadowing being the most controversial. The second with Aang entering the Avatar state by hitting a perfectly-shaped rock as opposed to opening his chakras on his own is near universally considered a giant Ass Pull because it raises the issue of why this was never set up or hinted at, nor is it anything Aang thought up himself, which makes much of his following triumph feel a bit unearned.
- To a lesser extent, Azula's Sannity Slippage can feel like this as while it's somewhat set up with her wryly admitting to her mother issues in "The Beach" and her loss of temper when Mai and Ty Lee turn on her, a reckless anger which persists into the next episode, she still seems more or less stable at the start of the finale so it feels abrupt that all it took was Ozai declaring himself Phoenix King while ordering Azula to stay behind as Fire Lord for the charismatic tactician who brought down Ba Sing Se to transform into a delusional paranoid wreck who exiles most of her supporters while suffering hallucinations. It doesn't take much Suspension of Disbelief to accept that someone in Azula's circumstances would become unstable but since she's given little to no interiority between "The Beach" the finale, including in "The Boiling Rock" when her descent into madness is supposed to begin, it can feel as if this trait comes out of nowhere to ensure she's in no state to challenge Zuko for the throne once the battle is done (and provide an admittedly memorable conclusion for the character).
- Awesome Ego: Toph proclaims herself the greatest earthbender on the planet — and can back it up.
- Base-Breaking Character:
- Fans either consider Mai an amusing Deadpan Snarker or find her Emotionless Girl schtick to be dull. The comics have only made her more divisive as she comes off as Unintentionally Unsympathetic to many.
- Jet is an incredibly divisive character because of his radical approach to decolonization. The series portrays him as an extremist and he is eventually killed off. This rubbed many fans the wrong way because they saw Jet as a traumatized teenager who only did what he had to to survive and they thought it was bizarre that Jet was one of the only characters to die in the series while the Big Bad Ozai did not. Other fans agree that Jet was in the wrong and they do not like him because of his manipulative personality and also the fact that most of the victims of his initial plan would have been civilians from his own side who just happened to live in occupied territory.
- Fire Lord Ozai is somewhat of a contested character in the fandom. Despite his rather short screen time, many felt that he was a truly intimidating Knight of Cerebus who made for a good Big Bad. However, others felt that he was rather generic and one-dimensional, especially compared to his children who were much more fleshed out and given more screen time. Alternatively, some argue he was generic and one-dimensional, but this made him unique in a world with a fair amount of gray morality, and he was interesting because of the effects he had on others even if he was flat himself.
- Broken Base:
- Aang's conflict in the finale split fans between those who felt it came out of nowhere and those who felt it was perfectly justified given what we'd seen of Aang to that point. Then there's the controversy over whether the resolution of using the previously unseen Energybending so Aang could stop Ozai without killing him was reasonably foreshadowed or a complete Ass Pull.
- Season 3. Fans either consider it to be the strongest season of the three or the weakest. Most of this is directed at the rather loose first half.
- The revelation that Roku and Sozin were best friends and that both are Zuko's great-grandfathers. Some fans love it and view it as a good plot twist while others view it as unnecessary and the most blatant case of Writers Cannot Do Math (taking into account the ages both would have to be when they had their kids; considering Rina was Roku's daughter and Ursa was born 76 years after Roku's death, Rina would have been at least 76-years-old when she gave birth to Ursa and at least 97 when she died.)
- Catharsis Factor:
- Zuko eventually turns good but he's not exactly the nicest guy in his first appearance. When Sokka attacks him to defend his village, Zuko doesn't even bother firebending; he grabs Sokka's spear, breaks it, and pokes him in the head several times out of pettiness. Sokka returns the favor in the pilot's climax, poking Zuko in the head several times to get him to release Aang's airbending staff.
- Likewise, in "The Western Air Temple," Zuko has defected and goes to offer his firebending services to Aang. The Gaang doesn't believe him and remind him Zuko has a history of hunting them down, providing a List of Transgressions. To top it all off, Katara smacks him in the face with a water whip, telling him he can't be trusted; she later bluntly tells him she will provide Betrayal Insurance if he ever hurts Aang again. (It's hard to blame her considering that Zuko betraying her in "The Crossroads of Destiny" led to Aang dying for a few minutes.) After this, Zuko works hard to show that he's changed, and admits in "The Southern Raiders" that Katara had a point to not trust him.
- Sokka clubbing General Fong in the head in "The Avatar State" after repeatedly forcing Aang into the Avatar State and burying Katara alive, making Aang think she was killed, is quite rewarding.
- The sandbender chief's son went behind his father's back to kidnap Appa and strand several innocent travelers, including children, in the desert. He's also a Jerkass that has the gall to accuse them of being thieves when they make it out with their lives using a windsail. Though it's a Nightmare Fuel moment for everyone else, it's satisfying when he goes Oh, Crap! when Toph identifies him as Appa's kidnapper, and Aang starts glowing. Aang proceeds to destroy several of the windsails while demanding to know where his sky bison is. The man is forced to confess, as his father is giving him a Death Glare and shouting "What have you done?!" and you can tell on his face he knows he has screwed up big time. It's also implied his father has further punishment for him offscreen for endangering the Avatar's life and violating Sacred Hospitality.
- Considering how smug and arrogant Azula has been in most of her appearances before now, the climax of "The Boiling Rock" is an immensely satisfying Break the Haughty moment for her. Not only does she fail to capture Zuko and Sokka, Mai's uncle betrays her, causing her to almost fall in a lake of boiling water, which is immediately followed by Mai and Ty Lee betraying her, ultimately leaving her feeling angry, humiliated and robbed of her bending power. Considering Azula bullied Ty Lee into accompanying her on her quest in the first place, it's also satisfying to see Mai and Ty Lee finally end their toxic 'friendship' with the princess who's tried to manipulate them both through fear for years.Azula: I never expected this from you. The thing I don't understand is why? Why would you do it? You know the consequences.
Mai: I guess you don’t know people as well as you think you do. You miscalculated. I love Zuko more than I fear you.
Azula: (outraged) No, you miscalculated! You should have feared me more!
The two girls charge at each other, before Ty Lee chi-paralyzes Azula in the back to save Mai, causing her to topple over onto her face on the ground.- Also considering how Azula before this pulled massive The Bad Guy Wins scenarios off in both "The Guru"/"The Crossroads of Destiny" and both parts of "The Day of Black Sun" that delivered massive defeats to the Gaang both times, seeing her be the one to lose and lose BIG in the aftermath of both of those only adds to how utterly sweet and therapeutic the whole situation is.
- If you despise Azula, then her bursting into tears and screaming of sadness in defeat after her Villainous Breakdown and defeat by Zuko and Katara can be truly satisfying to watch.
- After Ozai has burned his chances at being Father of the Year, literally, he shows he has no compunctions about murdering children as well as maiming them. Then he accidentally unblocks Aang's chi, allowing him to reach the Avatar State and curbstomp the Fire Lord in the series finale. Aang proceeds to strip him of his bending, leaving him to lie on the ground in a pathetic, half-naked mess. Suki and Toph arrive with Sokka on their shoulders, and the three of them proceed to mock Ozai. Sokka calls him "the Loser Lord" while Toph goes with "King of getting his butt whipped". Doesn't feel good to be beaten by a bunch of kids, does it? It's even better when you consider that he's been permanently Brought Down to Normal, and has to spend the rest of his miserable existence as a helpless normie locked in a cell.
- Bonus points that Aang, 100 years in the iceberg notwithstanding, was around the age that Zuko was when Ozai burned his face and banished him. Got to love how karma works sometimes.
- After witnessing all the crimes, destruction, and terror that the Fire Nation has unleashed upon the world for a hundred years from the Air Nomad Genocide, the near destruction of Southern Water Tribe and Siege of The Northern Water Tribe, and their attempt to incinerate the Earth Kingdom. Along with the many defeats and personal losses the Gaang suffered since the start of the series. The final episode where the Fire Nation is finally and totally defeated in utterly humiliating fashion by the heroes. With their leaders overthrown, their greatest conquests undone, with their imperial ambitions being all for nothing, it is so satisfying to see their century's long mad pursuit of global dominance brought to an end by the heroes.
- Character Perception Evolution:
- While Princess Azula has always been a popular villain, the reasons for why have changed quite a bit. During the original run of Books 2 and 3, the general view of Azula was that of an amoral sociopath who lacked the redeeming qualities of her brother Prince Zuko, to the point of manipulating her own allies, as well as being a highly competent and dangerous foe who effectively usurped Zuko as the primary threat to Team Avatar in her debut, took over Ba Sing Se from the inside, and nearly killing Aang herself, among other notable deeds. By the middle of The New '10s, people began to reinterpret her character in a more sympathetic light. As emotional abuse became more well known, people began to look at her relationship with her father Firelord Ozai differently, arguing that she was ultimately just as much of a victim as her brother. This also coincided with people going back to Book 3, which gave her some more sympathetic qualities (namely, revealing that she believed her mother Ursa hated her, and her increasing Sanity Slippage in Sozin's Comet), as well as Avatar: The Last Airbender - The Search revealing that Ozai only conceived her and Zuko for the sake of producing strong firebenders. While some still view her as irredeemable, many argue that she deserved as much of a chance at redemption as Zuko.
- When the show was running, Ozai was quite a divisive character, with his detractors pointing out that he is not as developed as other villains (namely his children) and has no sympathetic traits, being little more than an abuser and a genocidal tyrant. Years later, new fans of the show have taken to Ozai in a more positive manner, namely pointing out that Ozai was still a very compelling villain, in large part due to how straightfowardly and disturbingly evil he was and that not all antagonists need to be morally complex to work in the story. Many fans also picked on the more subtle elements of Ozai's character, such as the implication he himself was abused by Azulon the same way he abused his children. While he still is not exactly the most aclaimed villain in the franchise, Ozai now has a much more enthusiastic fanbase.
- Common Knowledge: Many consider Roku to be the worst Avatar for not stopping Sozin earlier, thus causing the 100 Year War. However, when Roku learned of Sozin's invasion of the Earth Kingdom, he immediately went to him and demanded he stop the aggressive expansion. When they came to blows, Roku easily defeated him, only sparing him because of their friendship. Roku also makes one and only one warning that if he didn't put a stop to his ambitions, he wouldn't hesitate to kill his old friend. And Sozin actually did stop and didn't start again for 25 years. It wasn't until two volcanos erupted on Roku's home island and Sozin's subsequent betrayal that lead to Roku's death and as a result, Sozin started up his invasion again, with no one to stop him.
- Complete Monster:
- Fire Lord Ozai is the power-hungry tyrant of the Fire Nation seeking to wipe out all resistance to his rule, even children. Ozai obtains the throne through manipulating his wife Ursa to help murder his father Azulon, and then banishing her, on the pain of death, without letting her see her children again. Ozai controls all aspects of his family's life, limiting their freedoms and encouraging their worst traits just to please him: he punishes his son Prince Zuko whenever the latter shows kindness or mercy, going as far as burning his face and banishing him for speaking out of turn; he encourages his daughter Princess Azula to be a perfect, merciless weapon for the Fire Nation, only to cast her aside when he no longer needs her. When faced with open rebellion in the Earth Kingdom, Ozai plans to use Sozin's Comet to incinerate the entire continent and rule from the ashes as Phoenix King. A horrible father and a brutal dictator, Ozai represents the very worst of Fire Nation imperialism and Avatar Aang's ultimate test to stay true to his pacifist ideals.
- "Imprisoned": The Warden is the cruel overseer of the Fire Nation prison rig on the Mo Ce Sea, who is dedicated to crushing the spirits of his captives. Rounding up any Earthbenders among various villages, the Warden imprisons and enslaves them, forcing them to build Fire Nation warships while keeping them in miserable conditions to destroy any hope they have. The Warden is so temperamental and petty that he throws a prisoner into solitary confinement for a week as punishment for coughing in his presence; in another case, the Warden flings his own Captain overboard just for not answering a question clearly enough. When Katara manages to convince the prisoners to fight their oppressors, the Warden tries to kill them all with no mercy.
- Creepy Awesome: Koh the Face Stealer for his freakish design and sinister mannerisms, Azula for her cunning and mad firebending skills, and Hama for the fact that she managed to develop a horrifying new waterbending technique.
- Crossover Ship: One fan artist
had the (seriously) brilliant idea of pairing Iroh with Grandma Fa. Considering the fact that they both have a delightfully quirky sense of humor, as well as a strong bond with their younger relatives (Zuko and Mulan, respectively), it's really a match made in heaven.- Another one that has been growing recently in The New '20s is Toph being shipped with Violet Parr, Gwen Tennyson, Raven, and very rarely Mavis Dracula, due to all of them being snarky teens with superpowers, though Toph and Violet has been the go-to pairing out of the group. With Raven officially joining the hit video game Fortnite as part of the Chapter 2 Season 6 Battle Pass (that has long since ended), with Toph joining the game herself during Chapter 5 Season 2 as part of the "Elements" mini event (alongside the Gaang and Korra) and upon Violet's parents and Uncle Frozone joining the game during Chapter 5 Season 4 (two seasons after Toph's debut), fans are clamoring for Violet to join the game in a future wave so that Toph, Violet and Raven can be in an official game together.
- Cry for the Devil: Though Azula seems completely evil, her Villainous Breakdown and her status as a Tragic Villain coming to light in the finale is one of the saddest parts of the show.
- Draco in Leather Pants:
- Zuko had received this treatment since the show first aired, with many fans often forgiving or looking past his flaws or wrongdoings well before his eventual redemption. The interpretation of Zuko as being an awkward and demure young boy who is pure of heart has become almost ubiquitous with the character within much of the fandom, in stark contrast to his angry, impatient and selfish nature which caused many of his problems depicted in the series.
- Azula's worst wrongdoings are rather often overlooked, typically in some fan works that depict her reconciling with other major characters her age. Fans also have a habit of downplaying her abuse of Zuko, or constantly giving her Freudian Excuses to justify it.
- Fire Lord Sozin has managed to receive this from a few fans who support his goal to expand the Fire Nation to other nations of the world, believing his claim that the Fire Nation's resources would help other nations thrive. Although he can partially be considered A Lighter Shade of Black compared to his descendants, this completely ignores the fact that he committed genocide on the peaceful Airbenders, killed the current avatar and his own best friend Roku when he refused to let him go through with his plans, and his actions were shown to drive many of the nations he conquered into a state of fear and poverty.
- Jet receives this from fans who view his extremist actions in his debut episode to combat the Fire Nation as entirely justified. While he's certainly intended to be sympathetic, the fact that his plan would have seen countless innocent civilians on his own side being killed in the crossfire should be enough to quash any notions of him just being a heroic freedom fighter.
- Ensemble Dark Horse:
- Between his unconventional Secret Test of Character, being a powerful earthbender, being one of the few people who Aang knew before being frozen, and his generally madcap personality, Bumi was a fan favorite from the word "Go".
- Meng, the Adorkable little girl with a crush on Aang from "The Fortuneteller", got quite a lot of love for a character only appearing in a single, ultimately not too important episode. This also extended to her voice actress' performance with the creators themselves, as they ended up casting her as series mainstay Toph Beifong.
- Ty Lee is a popular character due to her unique ability, Villainous Crush on Sokka, perky personality, and attractive design in general. Many were disappointed that she only appeared in three episodes of the final season.
- Suki was likewise not meant to reappear after her debut, but her popularity made her the biggest case of Ascended Extra in the series; she returned twice in Season 2, became an Official Couple with Sokka, then in Season 3 became The Sixth Ranger for Team Avatar.
- Koh only had a meaningful role in one episode, but he's so creepy that fans still yearn for his return.
- Jin only had a role in one filler episode, however is one of the most popular characters in fanart and fanfiction. Many love her due to her cute design, personality, and for being someone to ship Zuko with for fans who don't like him with Mai.
- Of the past Avatars, Kyoshi tends to be the most popular, despite speaking in only two episodes. This stems from her striking design note , her great power note , and being a Pragmatic Hero relative to the other Avatars note . She's even received a series of spin-off novels detailing her backstory and time as the Avatar.
- June only appears in three episodes, but she is well liked for being a Badass Normal antagonist who is only an antagonist because she was paid by Zuko, making her more stand out as a result. Her unique fighting style, and design, makes her well liked for such a small role.
- The Big Bad Hippo, one of Toph's competitors from her first episode, for being a Mighty Glacier with some Hulk Speak.
- Piandao, the retired Fire Nation swordsman who briefly mentors Sokka and once defeated a hundred fire nation soldiers in the past after deserting from the army. Despite not possessing any bending skills his episode training Sokka is considered to be one of the better mentor episodes.
- Huu, the Cool Old Guy of the Foggy Swamp waterbending tribe, who introduces plantbending to the series and puts it to good use against fire nation tanks in "The Day of the Black Sun".
- Shyu, the Token Good Teammate of the Fire Sages, and the grandson of Avatar Roku's firebending teacher.
- The Cabbage Merchant, Avatar's resident Running Gag and Butt-Monkey, became one of the most iconic bit characters in the series. His actor James Sie eventually started attending cons alongside the main cast, and was even brought back to reprise the role in the live action series.
- Evil Is Cool:
- Princess Azula is regarded as one of the coolest characters in the series, as well as one of the most evil. Those are directly tied together (or rather how good she is at being evil).
- Ozai. While he has nowhere as much screentime as his children, the ominous build-up to his character via flashback presents him as a truly intimidating figure. And once Season 3 kicks in, it shows that it's far from an Informed Ability, and he comes closest to giving Aang the fight of his life. The fact that he's voiced by The Joker helps.
F-M
- Fandom Rivalry: Ever since The Legend of Korra aired, Last Airbender and Korra fans had maintained a rivalry over which series is superior. While it waned in the years after both series concluded, the rivalry was revived in 2020, when Netflix obtaining the streaming rights to both series.
- Fan-Preferred Couple:
- The Zuko/Katara (aka "Zutara") fanbase is legendary, considerably outstripping both Official Couples Kataang (Katara/Aang) and Maiko (Mai/Zuko) put together. The "Ember Island Players" episode lampshaded this with an in-universe play that put Zuko and Katara together and having her refer to Aang, repeatedly, as "like a little brother". A long-running debate in the fandom revolved around whether the Zutara pairing becoming canon was ever even considered by the writers. One of the show's writers, John O'Bryan, would confirm years later that some of the writing team did push for the pairing
on the Braving the Elements podcast, him included, but "lost that fight." - In the early days of the fandom, Tokka (Toph/Sokka) was Sokka's most preferred couple. And this was before Sukka (Suki/Sokka) was made canon.
- After the show was Vindicated By Netflix, meaning that a lot of newer viewers got caught up in it, Zukka (Zuko/Sokka) has surprisingly eclipsed Zutara and Tokka almost entirely on some social media platforms. Mostly because the new fans noticed a lot of tender moments between them, the standards of homosexual relationships changing over time, many of them being shippers of the highly popular Keith/Lance pairing from Netflix's Voltron: Legendary Defender who see Zuko/Sokka as Surprisingly Similar Characters. It's also easily bigger than both Zuko and Sokka with their canon love interests, Mai and Suki respectively.
- The Zuko/Katara (aka "Zutara") fanbase is legendary, considerably outstripping both Official Couples Kataang (Katara/Aang) and Maiko (Mai/Zuko) put together. The "Ember Island Players" episode lampshaded this with an in-universe play that put Zuko and Katara together and having her refer to Aang, repeatedly, as "like a little brother". A long-running debate in the fandom revolved around whether the Zutara pairing becoming canon was ever even considered by the writers. One of the show's writers, John O'Bryan, would confirm years later that some of the writing team did push for the pairing
- Foe Yay Shipping:
- Zuko and Aang:
- Zuko says that his drive to capture Aang used to be his "inner fire". Given that this line was delivered mere minutes after he and Aang danced together inside a fiery rainbow, fans interpreted it as a confession of love.
- In the first season, Aang retrieves Katara's necklace from Zuko and jokingly says the prince wanted her to have it back. She sarcastically tells him to give Zuko a kiss for her, which shippers understood literally.
- When Aang is having nightmares in season 3, Zuko appears shirtless in his dreams. Fans immediately took notice that all of Zuko's Shirtless Scenes happened when Aang was not present, and consequently Aang has never actually seen Zuko shirtless.
- Katara and Zuko started to get some traction as early as season 1. In "The Waterbending Scroll", Zuko ties Katara to a pole and offers to exchange her mother's necklace for Aang. A later episode reveals that Katara's memento is actually a Water Tribe betrothal necklace.
- Some fans like to interpret Zhao's inexplicable rivalry with Zuko as repressed romantic feelings towards him.
- Azula and Zuko, to almost Mind Game Ship levels. When she isn't playfully teasing "Zuzu", she's exploiting his fears and insecurities for her own benefit, somehow making "brother" sound erotic. Fans like to interpret Azula's We Can Rule Together spiel in "Crossroads of Destiny" as a Femme Fatale trying to drag The Hero into villainy rather than siblings plotting conquest. Then in "The Awakening", Zuko decides to confront Azula in her bedroom, and she deflects his accusations by getting way too close to him while wearing nothing but a robe.
- After defeating Suki, Azula wore her clothes to infiltrate Ba Sing Se. Later on, Azula taunts Sokka (Suki's boyfriend) that Suki is her "favourite prisoner" and talks about how Sokka would rescue her, before eventually giving up, which some fans like to interpret as a disturbing reference to Prison Rape.
- Jet's behavior towards Zuko in "City of Walls and Secrets" — the observations of a Well-Intentioned Extremist, or the obsession of a Stalker with a Crush?
- Avatar Roku and Fire Lord Sozin, once their backstory was revealed: They were best friends and even shared the same birthday. Neither of them got married or had kids until much later in life.
- Zuko and Aang:
- Fountain of Memes: Sokka. Practically every comedic moment he's involved in is basically a gold mine of memetic levels, most notably during his cactus-juice-induced hallucinatory state.
- Franchise Original Sin:
- The follow-up show's big complaint of having a lot of overpowered villains starts here, as far back as the introduction of Princess Azula and the Fire Nation upping its game after the first season, with Team Avatar running away constantly and winning only small victories for most of the rest of the show. However, this is tempered due to the villains always failing to capture the Gaang. Also these villains tended to have a lot more resources due to the technological advancements of the Fire Nation and their straitlaced education system.
- The Jerkass spirits were some of the most despised characters in the sequel series. The spirits in the original could be the same way albeit the ones we saw were usually acting in grief (Hai Be after the destruction of the forest) and dealt with, nice and only taking revenge on those who deserved it (Tui and La), or seen as jerks by the other spirits and met Laser-Guided Karma (the baboon who insulted Aang). The Legend of Korra would portray being a Jerkass as normal among the spirits and always portrayed as in the right even when the humans have a point, such as refusing to help Korra protect Republic city from Kuvira or attacking spirits in self defense after they were forced from their homes.
- Genius Bonus:
- Ozai's title of "Phoenix King" in the finale is a reference to fenghuang (the phoenix lord of demons, which is symbolic in and of itself). It should be noted, however, that fenghuang is distinct from the Western phoenix, though they tend to be conflated in Western imagination.
- The sheer number of accurate details from different cultures is immensely rewarding for anyone familiar with Asian history, and not just Ancient Asian history. Many of the best references and parallels are actually from 20th century China and Japan. Ba Sing Se especially will ring a lot of bells for anyone who's been to China lately. The Dai Li, for example, are named after a real person
, the leader of the Kuomintang's State Sec known as the 'Bureau of Investigation and Statistics' during the Chinese Civil War, who were known for their extreme brutality in quelling dissent against the state. The 'Bureau of Investigation and Statistics' moved to Taiwan where they reorganized and still exist today. Likewise, Lake Laogai, the Earth Kingdom's secret prison, is named for the now-abolished, real-life prison camps of Communist China (the equivalent of a Soviet gulag)
. - As one fan has noticed
, Hama displays some hallmarks of the aswang (one of several related species of monstrous creatures from Philippine Mythology).
- Gotta Ship 'Em All: The fandom has shipped almost every possible combination of characters, up to and including everyone with everyone else simultaneously.
- Growing the Beard:
- In the trope sense, it seems most of the fans agree the show was great from the start but others like to point at various points in Season 1 (and up to Season 2) as to where it "really" hit its stride. "The Storm" which reveals the backstories of Aang and Zuko is a popular candidate.
- "Avatar Roku: Winter Solstice Part 2" is the first time the Gaang enters the Fire Nation, the first time Aang meets Avatar Roku, the first time Zhao poses a threat to them, and is the episode where we learn that there is a time limit to defeat Fire Lord Ozai. Basically this episode kicks off the main plot.
- Harsher in Hindsight:
- Iroh exasperatedly telling Zuko he'll never find the Avatar in the first episode. Once you know Zuko's whole backstory, it comes off pretty damn callous in a rewatch since he's offhandedly saying "Oh, just give up on ever returning to your homeland, family, and birthright and go to bed." To be fair, they had no legitimate indication at the time that it was anything more than a Snipe Hunt used to manipulate Zuko to keep him from turning face in his exile.
- A meta example: in "The Siege of the North, Part 1", Pakku sarcastically tells one of his pupils that if they keep their performance up, they may be able to fight a sea sponge in a couple of years. The creators confirmed in a commentary that this was intended to be a friendly Take That! towards SpongeBob SquarePants, Nick's other most-popular show at the time. However, following The New '10s, which had the Sequel Series Korra be completely Screwed by the Network at every possible opportunity in favor of Spongebob, this formerly lighthearted jab can seem a lot more serious/justified.
- In "The Cave Of Two Lovers," Iroh has a severe allergic reaction to a plant he mistakes for tea, and he warns Zuko that if he doesn't get treatment, the rash could spread to his throat. In the same year that episode aired, his voice actor, Mako, would die from esophageal cancer.
- "Appa's Lost Days": Team Avatar's quest to find Appa in Ba Sing Se was pointless, because Appa never made it to Ba Sing Se. Likewise, Aang's assertion a few episodes earlier ("He's here, I can feel it") becomes much harsher when you realize just how wrong he was. If not for the Guru, Aang and Appa very well could never have seen each other again.
- In "The Guru," Azula subtilty taunts the Earth King when she learns that Long Feng was manipulating him by saying "It's terrible when you can't trust the people who are closest to you." It became dramatically ironic when Mai and Ty Lee turn against her in the third season, which causes her to undergo a Villainous Breakdown.
- Azula taking down the Kyoshi Warriors and impersonating them was bad enough in the last arc for season two. What made it worse was that she casually hints to Sokka during the Black Sun that she tortured Suki into a Despair Event Horizon during her time in prison, and mocking him for not realizing his girlfriend was locked up all this time.
- In "Nightmares And Daydreams", Mai is trying to cheer up Zuko, who just stumbled out of a war meeting with his father and sister, but he doesn't mention what happened in there. He seems depressed over it, though, and whatever happened in there helped him finally pull a Heel–Face Turn. We later see that this was the meeting where the Fire Nation decided to burn the entire Earth Kingdom to the ground, turning its surface to glass and murdering every single person there.
- In "The Beach":
- Azula comments that her own mother thought she was a monster, then jokes that she was correct in thinking so. The scene becomes much less funny after the finale, where Azula hallucinates Ursa showing her affection, which causes the princess to break down in tears.
- Ty Lee says that spending time with her friends at Ember Island is something that she will remember forever. This heartwarming line becomes cringeworthy following the events of "The Boiling Rock - Part 2", where Ty Lee turns against Azula and is imprisoned in return.
- "The Beach" has Azula hilariously, yet somewhat painfully, try to socialize and act like a normal teenager but just cannot do it for the life of her. Then, you realize that it's because of this that she prefers to use manipulation and fear to get what she wants but it also sets her up for a lifetime of misery and betrayal once those tactics don't work anymore.
- Heartwarming in Hindsight:
- Toph asks Aang if it's possible for friendships to transcend lifetimes. Considering her own friendship with Aang's reincarnation Korra in the sequel series, it's safe to say it happened for her.
- Considering what happened the last time The Fire Nation came to the Southern Water Tribe "The Southern Raiders" seeing Aang sacrifice himself to save the South Pole from Zuko goes a long way in explaining why Katara and Sokka are so loyal to him.
- He Really Can Act: Until Avatar, Dante Basco was mostly known for playing aloof "tough guy" or hip kid characters. Zuko finally gave him a role that allowed him to show off his true dramatic talents.
- He's Just Hiding:
- Jet, Zhao, and Combustion Man get a lot of this. The sequel series reveals it's actually true with Zhao... In the worst possible manner.
- Many fans still believe this of the Air Nomads, arguing that maybe some were still alive somewhere. One of the comics confirmed that some of them did survive the initial attacks... for a while. According to Word of God, Aang found a small herd of sky bison in the remote mountains between the original show and Legend Of Korra, so depending on your viewpoint, the airbenders really were just hiding.
- Hilarious in Hindsight:
- In the first two episodes, Gran Gran is portrayed by Melendy Britt, the voice actress of the Adora/She-Ra in the original She-Ra: Princess of Power. The 2018 reboot takes a lot of inspiration from this series, including the Animesque style.
- In "The Fortuneteller", Katara hopes that the man she marries will be tall. Aang is shorter than Katara in the series, but we find out in The Legend of Korra that he had a growth spurt and wound up being a whole head taller than Katara.
- The first tie-in video game featured steampunk-heavy people who believed bending to be the source of all of the world's problems as the antagonists. Now look what's happened in the first season of The Legend of Korra. Somewhere, "The Maker" must be laughing her ass off.
- In "The Siege of the North, Part 1", Hahn mispronounces Sokka's name with a long "O" sound. That same pronunciation is used for the entirety of the live-action The Last Airbender film.
- General Fong's single-minded determination to stop the Fire Nation takes an ironic bent, as his voice actor, Daniel Dae Kim, would later go on to play Ozai himself in the live action Netflix remake series.
- In the Brazilian dub, Mariana Torres voices Suki during the character's first appearance. She would later be replaced by Teline Carvalho, though would remain working on the series by lending her voice to princess Azula. This switcheroo becomes amusing when, late in the second season, a major plot point involves Azula impersonating Suki.
- This wouldn't be the last time a major character with fire powers and a parent-induced scar over the left eye would come to be. Shoto Todoroki of My Hero Academia would end up sporting many similarities to Zuko (albiet, by pure coincidence, as The Last Airbender never really took off in Japan). Both characters come from dysfunctional families with abusive fathers and beloved mothers forced by the fathers into an arranged marriage, said fathers holding a high rank in society and choosing their wives for the genes they providenote .
- The end of "Nightmares and Dreams" has Aang declare to Ozai in a dream that he's not wearing pants. When the two actually fight, Pants are essentially the only thing Ozai is wearing.
- The Beifong family crest is a boar. In The Legend of Korra reveals that Toph went on to found the Republic City police department and her daughter succeeded her as Da Chief.
- Incest Yay Shipping:
- Zuko and Azula. It helps that they suffers a lot from Foe Romance Subtext.
- Some between Katara and Sokka, because of the time they dressed up as a married couple to pretend they were Aang's parents.
- Inferred Holocaust:
- The show is often quite open about death by kids' show standards, but in particular there is no way that Aang didn't kill a hell of a lot of people in his Avatar-state rampage at the end of "The Siege of the North", though it is downplayed since it's heavily implied that this is one of the main reasons why Aang doesn't want to enter the Avatar State again, as it clashes with his pacifistic ideals.
- In the finale, it seems highly likely that many Fire Nation soldiers died when Sokka, Toph, and Suki crash their air fleet.
- It Was His Sled:
- The titular king in "The King of Omashu" also being Aang's childhood friend Bumi was a surprise when the episode first aired, but it's common knowledge now.
- For most of the show, Ba Sing Se is portrayed as a well-defended utopia, one of the best and safest places in the entire world. "City of Walls and Secrets" shockingly reveals that it's actually a Crapsaccharine World seemingly inspired by Nineteen Eighty-Four, whose oppressive government forces peace by criminalizing any discussion of the war against the Fire Nation (up to using brainwashing to enforce compliance), but chances are most people are aware of that long before seeing the episode, thanks to "There is no war in Ba Sing Se" being a popular meme.
- Zuko's Heel–Face Turn was fairly surprising when it first occurred, but it has since become one of the most popular and well-known parts of the show, and is frequently cited as an example of how to do character development and a redemption arc right. Most people who have been on the internet since Netflix announced the show was coming to the platform are likely aware of this before even seeing the first episode (the fact that Zuko has a meme
making fun of his Jerkass ways probably helped).
- Jerkass Woobie: Zuko. He behaves like a Royal Brat and an Arrogant Kung-Fu Guy during most of the first season, but he gains more sympathy when we learn more of his backstory: his father, Fire Lord Ozai, scarred him, rejected and banished him from the Fire Nation for merely objecting to his plans, and Zuko is desperately chasing after the Avatar to restore his honor. By learning to be nicer throughout the series and eventually joining the Gaang, he slips more into The Woobie.
- Jerks Are Worse Than Villains: Ozai, Azula, Long Feng, and even Zhao are quite enjoyable as villains. Zuko also qualified before his Heel–Face Turn. Needless to say, this resulted in some characters being held with more disdain:
- "Imprisoned": The old man who ousted Haru as an Earthbender to the Fire Nation ends up being hated more than the Fire Nation soldiers themselves, due to him selling out Haru despite Haru saving his life and suffering no repercussions for it.
- "The Siege of the North": Hahn is widely disliked since his only real purpose on-screen is using Yue for his own ends and being a jerk to Sokka. Despite Zhao being the villain he is, it's not hard to find satisfaction in Hahn's assassination attempt failing and leading him to his (presumed) death.
- "Zuko Alone": The villagers Zuko rescued drew a lot of ire for immediately turning on him after outing himself as a firebender, completely ignoring the fact that he just saved their village.
- "The Headband": Hide is detested for being nothing more than just a mean popular boy who is overly possessive of Onji and is antagonistic to Aang out of sheer jealousy. He even goes as far as to rat out Aang's dance party and ruin everyone's great time.
- Launcher of a Thousand Ships: Azula has been shipped with about everyone, since she constantly talks in a sultry voice no matter the situation, constantly smirks even if she's trying to kill someone, and the way she worms her way into people's psyches is played almost like seduction.
- Love to Hate:
- Azula and Long Feng are beloved for how far their schemes got them, particularly when the latter is ultimately Out-Gambitted at the end of Book 2.
- Zhao is much less Evil Is Cool but definitely this for how his evilness is played up by his arrogance. Also, Jason Isaac's voicework makes him fun to watch.
- Fire Lord Ozai, especially in Book 3 when his villainy becomes more front and center. This is especially prominent when he becomes very hammy with the power of Sozin's Comet and has his ultimate final battle with Aang to determine the fate of the world.
- Magnificent Bitch:
- "Bato of the Water Tribe" & "The Old Masters": June is a sultry, whip-wielding Bounty Hunter who uses her shirshu Nylah to masterfully track targets across the world, using Nylah's paralyzing tongue and her own fighting skills to easily accomplish her missions. Hired by Prince Zuko to hunt down Avatar Aang, June first tracks down and ambushes Aang's friend Katara, then uses her as bait to lure Aang into a fight, where June works with Nylah to take down Aang's sky bison Appa. Even when beaten by the group's quick thinking, June simply dusts herself off and continues her successful career, spending her free time kicking ass in bar fights while endearing herself to the occupants before working with Zuko once more on a mission to help protect the Earth Kingdom with her usual snark and skill.
- "The Ember Island Players": The Boy in the Iceberg version of Princess Azula demonstrates more of her intelligent abilities over her less than savory ones. When confronted in a trap by Zuko and the others, Azula tricks them all into looking away so that she can escape and later on, successfully leads the insurgence that takes Ba Sing Se for the Fire Nation, while both swaying Zuko to her side and also taking Aang out of commission with a lightning bolt. Azula then later on takes Zuko out in a climactic battle and proudly bows to her father Fire Lord Ozai when he takes full control of the world in their family's name.
- Memetic Badass:
- Toph. She even gets it in-universe, one of her students being surprised that Toph was born to human parents instead of willing herself into existence from a boulder.
- Iroh gets this from fans as well. A common joke is that he was not pulling himself up while training in prison, he was pushing the Fire Nation down.
- Sokka often has fans exaggerate his intelligence from "competent strategist and inventor" to "rivals Ozymandias." Since he took out a fleet of war balloons with just two other fighters and invented both dirigibles and submersibles, he could be a realistic Ozymandias — capable of repeated moments of inventive and strategic genius, but still only human. Einstein didn't discover relativity every day. Considering Leonardo Da Vinci only theorized this kind of thing, whereas Sokka not only came up with the concept but designed functional units, and, in the case of the submersables, put the design into practice for the first time the week they would be used for an invasion, calling him an engineering genius may be understating it. Okay, he started out as a "competent strategist and inventor", but after he Took a Level in Badass he became the Steampunk Ozymandias.
- Avatar Kyoshi
◊, overlapping with Memetic Psychopath:- Kyoshi doesn't bend blood. She bathes in it.
- The reason Kyoshi lived to be 230 years old? Death feared her.
- Aang himself. Several have stated that if he hadn't been killed off prior to The Legend of Korra, then none of its big villains would have gotten very far in their respective sagas, since he isn't Unskilled, but Strong like Korra is.
- This also happens to "Kuzon," the alias Aang used when he briefly attended a Fire Nation School. Since during this time he won over On Ji, humiliated her school bully "boyfriend" without even trying, and threw a dance party over a few days while evading the school authorities. Maybe speculate that if Aang somehow continued his attendance at the school as "Kuzon," he would have absolutely dominated the school's social hierarchy.
- Memetic Loser:
- Kuruk is treated as such compared to all other Avatars, due to dying very young, spending most of his short life trying to show off and impress the ladies instead of saving the world, and overall being such an apparent jerk that he lost his wife to Koh on their wedding day.
- Roku because, unless you've read the roleplaying game core book, the only backstory you've seen is his journey to learn all four elements and his failure to stop Sozin from starting the Hundred Years War. The other known Avatars (including Kuruk) have their most badass moments in the show, comics, or novels.
- Memetic Molester: Azula, due to the massive amount of subtext at play between her, her friends, and her brother.
- Memetic Psychopath: Kyoshi, thanks to her frequent Flanderization by the fanbase as a Blood Knight who considers violence to be the best solution to any problem.
- Mentor Ship: Aang is shipped with all three of his bending teachers — Katara, Toph, and Zuko.
- Misaimed Fandom:
- There exists a sizeable group of viewers who feel that Zuko should have killed Fire Lord Ozai with his Lightning Redirection during the Day of Black Sun, as in their mind it would have stopped the conflict. This misses the fact that Zuko makes it clear its the Avatar's job to do so, and the show heavily leans into the idea that if he did so, he'd be no better than Ozai, who plotted the death of his own father to obtain the throne. This idea is referenced when Zuko suggests letting Iroh fight Ozai, and Iroh refuses because it would seem like he's just trying to claim the throne, thus not ending the conflict. Letting Aang be the one to do so, thereby making it clear how wrong Ozai is, was the best option to avoid the war continuing and things getting worse.
- Some fans believe that Aang should have killed Ozai in the finale and are unhappy with him taking away his bending instead. This runs counter to the themes of the series that the finale hammers home; no one is born evil, even villains are human and their lives have value and should be given a chance to change, no matter how far they've fallen. Aang's purpose was to bring back the values of love and mercy that had been lost due to the war, as the only true way to finally bring about lasting peace, but this idea sometimes goes right over people's heads, and don't understand why the heroes don't simply kill the villains.
- Due to her role in the story, viewers tend to either treat Azula as a monster who cannot be redeemed, or as a victim of mental disabilities that isn't to blame for her actions. The series itself frames her as being in the middle of the two; she does have a mental disorder, and her father was not a positive influence on her at all, but Azula still makes choices on her own that make her an antagonist that needs to be stopped. Various episodes show her insecurities and flaws, making it clear she is a byproduct of the Fire Nations war, and other episodes show her being cruel out of her own desire to be. Like the above examples, Azula is presented as a terribly flawed human being, and while she should be accountable for the harm she has caused, she's still a person who doesn't deserve to be killed or treated as unforgiveable. The finale of the series hammers home the middle ground more by showing both sides of these, but despite that, many tend to stick to one side and view her as an innocent girl who is unfairly treated as an antagonist or a monster that doesn't deserve to live. Because of this situation, a brokenbase has developed over the topic of whether Azula should be redeemed or not. Some believe that once she realizes her flaws and Ozai's manipulations, she will be able to overcome her antagonistic nature and become a healthy, good person alongside her family, friends, and Team Avatar; others, however, believe Azula has caused too much harm to the world and others to be forgiven and do not think that Azula even wants to be redeemed.
- Mis-blamed: Some people claim the energybending in the finale was thrown in as an Ass Pull in order to avoid killing on a kids' show, however Mike and Bryan claim to have had the idea as the resolution of the conflict in the series bible from the beginning.
- Moe:
- Ty Lee. Peppy and childish with large eyes.
- Toph is very Moe in appearance, although more of a Badass Adorable when you consider what she's capable of. As in, "Kick your ass to oblivion and then some with a bunch of rocks without even bothering to look at you" Badass Adorable. Doesn't deter a lot of fans from viewing her as Moe all the same, though.
- Zuko, especially during the episode "The Western Air Temple" where he tries to join Team Avatar and it doesn't go so well at first, resulting in him yelling, "Why am I so bad at being good!?" There's also the fact that his temper stems more from him being the Woobie than him being a jerkass for the most part, and he can be very socially awkward.
- Most Wonderful Sound: The epic sounds of Zuko and Azula shooting fire at each other during the comet-enhanced Agni Kai.
- Multiple Demographic Appeal: Sure, it's intended to be a kids' show. Yet, it also tackles very mature themes, has plenty of Fanservice for anyone who's interested, and isn't afraid to say die when it's warranted, all without becoming kid-unfriendly.
N-W
- Narm:
- In "The Great Divide", the scene where Aang breaks up a fight between the two tribal leaders and discovers that both of them have been hoarding food is clearly meant to be the point where his frustration at their inability to get along finally boils over. The problem is that his facial expressions are so exaggerated during his outburst that it looks more like Comical Overreacting than actual anger. It doesn't help that immediately after the outburst he's distracted when he sees a custard that makes him hungry, making it look like he was only pretending to be mad.
- In "Bitter Work", after Iroh refuses to shoot lightning at Zuko so he can practice the redirection technique, the prince stands alone in a thunderstorm and demands the universe strike him with everything it's got. When no lightning comes, Zuko tears up and screams in frustration. The scene as a whole is unintentionally comical due to how over-the-top Zuko's reaction and facial expressions are.
- In "The Desert", Aang's declaration of "You muzzled Appa!?", followed by him immediately entering the Avatar State. Something about the delivery of the line, the sudden shift in the musical score, plus the fact that muzzling Appa was enough to set Aang off like this even though he already knew that the Sandbenders had done the worse deed of stealing Appa is unintentionally hilarious.
- During "Lake Laogai," in the shot of Zuko when Iroh is admonishing him to ask himself "the big questions," the former is shown with clenched teeth, and he visibly starts to tremble a bit towards the end before yowling with frustration and throwing down his swords. For a couple of reasons ((A) the shape in which Zuko's mouth was drawn, and (B) the fact that the gritted teeth is shown at the start of the shot, rather than only appearing towards the end of Iroh's line), it's a little hard to seriously imagine his mounting rage with that visual in one's head.
- Zuko's shouting in "The Beach" of "My father decided to teach me a permanent lesson - on my face!" is suitably tragic... but still incredibly awkward.
- Narm Charm:
- Zuko's emo moments, including the aforementioned lightning scene, are a frequent target of mockery by the fandom, but he's still considered to have one of the greatest redemption arcs in animation history for a reason. It helps that the show is self-aware about his overreactions and itself makes fun of him for them. In particular, while the aforementioned lightning scene is certainly one of the most if not the most over-the-top scene in the show. Zuko has ample reason to view himself as a Cosmic Plaything. Zuko having such a huge breakdown after everything he's gone through. Along with the music score, makes it still work around to being considered an noteworthy scene that represents Zuko's tragedy.
- Azula's Villainous Breakdown including after losing her fight against Katara in the Finale. On its own, it just looks like she's throwing a ridiculously over-the-top tamper tantrum, but if you take into account everything she went through, being psychologically and emotionally manipulated by her father, repressing her deepest emotions, not being allowed to grieve over her Missing Mom, losing the only people she had as friends, and being denigrated by her father over her failures, it becomes much more tragic. It's also very easy to forget that Azula is fourteen years old at the time.
- Never Live It Down:
- There exists a Vocal Minority of fans who never forgave Katara for telling Sokka that he didn't love their mother the way she did. Not helping matters is that she never apologized for this. While it's true that what Katara said was mean, it's human as she was consumed by negative emotions. The lack of forgiveness these fans have for this glosses over the fact that Zuko has had many more such moments like this with Iroh. Also that, throughout the series, Katara has been a supportive sister to Sokka to the point where he sees her as a mother figure.
- Katara mentioning her mother in general has become sort of a Memetic Mutation, as fans tend to exaggerate how often she talks about her, especially in relation to conversations with Zuko. In reality, mentions of her mother take up a little over a minute of screentime in total and they are fairly spaced out over the course of the 61-episode series. This is an especially special case considering how Zuko brings up his honor in nearly every episode and gets no flak for it.
- Azula's breakdown in the finale. Up until that point, Azula had always been presented as the most cool and composed villain of the series, in stark contrast to her hotheaded brother Zuko. Towards the end of the series, she begins to unravel mentally due to being betrayed by her family and friends, and the pressure of becoming Fire Lord, resulting in her going mad. This has forever painted her as having always been a violent psychopath in many viewers' minds.
- No Yay: Invoked by Bryke, who (jokingly) suggested "Bluezula" during the infamous shipping-slideshow. You can actually hear someone in the crowd screaming "What is WRONG with you?"
- One-Scene Wonder:
- Fire Lord Azulon only appeared in a flashback scene. He remains the only character Ozai showed complete respect towards.
- The Yuyan Archers only appeared in a few scenes of one episode, but are highly memorable for being Badass Normals with Improbable Aiming Skills in a world full of people with Elemental Powers.
- One True Threesome:
- Zutaraang (Zuko/Katara/Aang) is one of the most popular threesome ships because it puts an end to the infamous Zutara vs Kataang ship war, and according to the creators they are the three most important characters of the story. By the end of the series the characters form a classic The Hero, The Lancer, and The Heart trio.
- Jetkotara (Jet/Zuko/Katara) is another traidic ship with a following. Mostly based on the fandom joke that both Katara and Zuko are Jet's exes.
- The Zukki ship (Zuko/Sokka/Suki) has become surprisingly popular among the newest fans, mostly thanks to Zuko's chemistry with both Sokka and Suki in the animated series proper and in the comics and the general dislike towards Zuko's canon Love Interest Mai.
- On the other hand, there is also a smaller part for Zuko/Mai/Ty Lee or ,for people more willing to forgive Azula: Mai/Azula/Ty Lee
- Periphery Demographic:
- Despite being initially targeted at elementary-school kids, the show become quite popular (likely even more popular) among middle- and high-schoolers. And young adults in their twenties. And not-so-young adults. The most vocal fandom for the series back when it was airing were college-aged adult anime fans.
- Toph being a girl rather than a boy was supposed to appeal to the female demographic... which it did, but the showrunners probably weren't expecting her to be equally popular with teen to college-aged men.
- One of the Avatar video games on the Xbox 360 is popular among achievement hunters due to ease of getting 1000 points.
- Platonic Writing, Romantic Reading:
- Azula permanently sounding like she's trying to seduce her brother. Okay, admittedly, that's how she acts with pretty much everyone. But Bryke sure loved to tease the fans with this idea such as a possible pairing in the series being her and the Blue Spirit, aka Zuko's alternate identity.
- Azula's interactions with Ty Lee, and vice versa, sometimes come off as romantic or resemble a Pseudo-Romantic Friendship but this was unintentional. Azula was manipulating Ty Lee for her own gain and Ty Lee behaved sycophantically towards Azula out of her extreme fear that Azula would harm her. When Mai betrayed Azula for Zuko, Ty Lee also betrayed Azula for Mai. Later confirmed in the comic trilogies that Ty Lee prefers Mai and is not on pleasant terms with Azula post-series. Azula is still angry at her for her betrayal and Ty Lee is naturally even more afraid of her than before. This jossed many Tyzula shipping fanworks. Still, their voice actresses like the ship.
Azula's voice actress, Grey DeLisle has stated that she recognizes that a potential relationship between Azula and Ty Lee would be abusive
. But since this is Grey DeLisle we are talking about, Azula/Ty Lee being an abusive relationship just makes the pairing even more appealing to her.
- Portmanteau Couple Name: A lot of them:
- Aang and Katara = Kataang
- Sokka and Yue = Suekka or Yuekka
- Zuko and Mai = Maiko
- Zuko and Katara = Zutara
- Toph and Aang = Taang
- Jet and Katara = Jetara
- Suki and Sokka = Sukka
- Toph and Sokka = Tokka
- Jet and Zuko = Jetko
- Azula and Ty Lee = Tyzula
- Zuko and Aang = Zukaang
- Zuko and Sokka = Zukka
- Azula and Katara = Azutara
- Mai and Ty Lee = Mailee
- Realism-Induced Horror: Ozai is a tyrannical king who heads a war against the entire planet and tries to become the ruler of all the kingdoms. His most reprehensible behavior is his Domestic Abuse of his wife, children, and to a lesser extent his older brother. The comics made it worse by revealing he and Ursa were never in love. He forced her to marry him and the children were conceived under dubious consent.
- Recurring Fanon Character: In canon, the power of waterbenders rises and falls with the phases of the moon, and the Northern Water Tribe worships the Moon and Ocean Spirits. The power of firebending is also derived from the Sun. As such, a common fanon extrapolates this to the Fire Nation also worshipping a spirit of the Sun, who provides them with their powers. This is usually named Agni, partly because that's the name of the god of fire in Hindu mythology, partly because the Fire Nation has a custom of firebending duels called "Agni Kai", and partly because due to being descended from the same Indo-European roots "Agni" is similar to familiar terms such as "ignite". Similar spirits are sometimes added for air and earth, but their names and associations are not as well codified.
- Retroactive Recognition: Jin, the girl who had a thing for Zuko during his time in Ba Sing Se, would latter become recognizable to many gamers as the voice of the female Corrin.
- Rooting for the Empire:
- Azula's ability to provoke this almost rivals Grand Admiral Thrawn. People want to see her win simply because they know it will be awesome to watch. Her conquest of Ba Sing Se without lifting a finger is something that must be seen to be believed.
- Zuko can provoke this response simply for how horrible his life is.
- Sacred Cow:
- Avatar is considered by many to be one of the greatest television shows ever made, animated or live-action, and has an extremely high Multiple Demographic Appeal (so much so that the show overall received an exceedingly rare 100% critics' approval ratingnote , and an even rarer, nearly perfect audience score of 99%, on Rotten Tomatoes); as such, some fans can get very defensive whenever any form of criticism is brought up. Saying that you don't like this show or that its heavily divisive Sequel Series, The Legend of Korra, is better is bound to be met with serious backlash. Fans of other animated series can also get annoyed with the Avatar fandom because they perceive most Avatar fans to have little experience or knowledge of other animated series and find the series to be severely overhyped.
- It's safe to say that Iroh is this. He's easily not just the most beloved character in the Avatar universe, but one of the most beloved characters in animation history. What truly cements this however was being voiced by the late Makoto Iwamatsu, whose passing only amplified people's love of Iroh. It also helps that he is an All-Loving Hero with a backstory
that can and will break your heart.
- Ships That Pass in the Night: Teo (the guy in the wheelchair) and Ty Lee (one of the most acrobatic girls around) have some moderate popularity, despite the fact they never interacted and probably never saw each other. Fanfics that ship them usually include a mention of their meeting at Zuko's coronation to get around that problem in the easiest way available.
- Ship-to-Ship Combat:
- Rivals Harry Potter for some of the fiercest battles (Zutara vs Kataang) of all time. Not helped at all by the contradictory information provided by the people who worked on the show. With the showrunners claiming that Zutara was never a possibility, but other writers claiming it was strongly considered and could have become the Official Couple instead of Kataang.
- There is a lot of animosity between Suki/Sokka shippers and Toph/Sokka shippers.
- Zuko/Sokka (Zukka) became popular shortly after the series was put on Netflix, with many shippers attacking Zuko/Katara (Zutara) and Mai/Zuko (Maiko) shippers by claiming that Zutara is "racist" because Zuko's home nation persistently attacked Katara's tribe as well as the rest of the world (failing to realize that this claim would apply to Zukka as well) and that Maiko is a Destructive Romance that was Strangled by the Red String (which gave a boost to the Mai/Ty Lee ship that subsequently generated friction with many Azula/Ty Lee shippers). Some Zukka shippers have gone as far as to actively harass Dante Basco, Zuko's voice actor, simply because he favors the Zutara ship. Zukka's sudden explosive popularity has generated friction with some Aang/Zuko (Zukaang) and Jet/Zuko (Jetko) shippers as well, since the two used to be Zuko's more popular same-sex ships with accusations that Zukaang is "pedophilia" because of its 4-year age gap and that Jetko would be "unhealthy". As for Suki/Sokka, most Zukka shippers do not seem to mind that ship as much and write Suki out of the way or simply forget about her since her role in the series was minor. Since Suki is a much more beloved character than Mai, some people actually do portray her as a Shipper on Deck or ship Suki together with Zuko/Sokka, whereas something like Zuko/Mai/Sokka is near non-existent.
- Signature Scene: There's arguably many given how popular the series is, but these have the biggest claim to it:
- The "Long ago, the Four Nations lived in peace and harmony..." opening is widely considered the series signature start, as well as one of the series source of memes and parodies.
- Ozai burning Zuko's face in the flashback of The Storm, due to showing just how dark and mature the series's content could get, showing Zuko's Freudian Excuse and being Ozai's Moral Event Horizon.
- Signature Series Arc:
- Book 2: Earth is generally seen as the show’s peak. Not only it introduced Toph Beifong and Azula, who would go on to become huge Breakout Characters, but the Book explored many heavy themes about morale and and has compelling character arcs, such as Aang gradually maturing into a more responsible and serious man after Appa’s kidnapping, or Zuko’s journey throughout the Earth Kingdom, where he faces his his past and present.
- The “Sozin’s Comet” four-part finale. Not only it is the long-awaited culmination of all of the show’s conflicts that features many important character interactions and absolutely awesome fights, but it is widely agreed to be one of, if not the best Grand Finale in the entire Western Animation history.
- Sliding Scale of Social Satisfaction: Categorized as "Outside is Burning, Inside is Safe" in the cases of the Fire Nation and Ba Sing Se.
- The city of Ba Sing Se, considered the best-protected sanctuary, operates on "Outside is Burning, Inside is Safe". The city makes sure everyone inside is safe from the war (how well depends on social class), but mentioning the war is prohibited, and don't cross the Dai Li, the inner police, or they will brainwash you or make you disappear.
- In the Fire Nation's case, it can be said that they are the ones burning the outside. The Fire Nation enjoys a great standard of life inside its frontiers. In fact, the reason why they started the war in the first place is that their way of living, access to resources, and technological prowess are far superior to that of the other nations.
- Spoiled by the Format: The invasion of the Fire Nation on the day of the solar eclipse is built up as the final confrontation, and the final blow to end the war. Too bad it happens in episodes ten and eleven out of twenty-one. Any savvy viewer would know Failure Is the Only Option for the heroes. It helps that Azula already learned about the invasion plan at the end of season 2, allowing the viewer to put this together well ahead of time.
- Strangled by the Red String: Zuko and Mai being a couple in the very first scene involving both characters at the beginning of Book 3. The only build-ups to the relationship in the second book were a throwaway line from her friend Ty Lee note and a scene in a flashback sequence set several years before where Mai appears to have a crush on him, but there's no implication they've seen each other since. A comic with an original story had to fill in the gaps and explain how they got together. It's even argued that Zuko had more chemistry with Song and Jin, characters who only appeared in one episode each.
- Theme Pairing: Ursa and Hakoda are the single, loving parents of major characters (respectively, Zuko and siblings Katara and Sokka), who are pressured to abandon their kids because of the war. They are the main pairing of fanfics such as Guide Me Home.
- They Wasted a Perfectly Good Character:
- Ty Lee is a fan favorite with a unique ability and is much nicer than Azula or Mai despite being an antagonist. We never really learn anything about her (other than she comes from a big family where she felt overlooked), and we only see her three times during Season 3, only in one of these episodes was she a major character.
- Ozai and Iroh's father Azulon was only briefly seen in one flashback episode and mentioned in passing in another. Despite being the Fire Lord before Ozai and that most of the Hundred Year War passed during his reign, we know next to nothing about him.
- Koh, the Face Stealer is quite popular with many fans, yet we never see him after his debut (at least, not in the show proper. He makes appearances in some sort of (now defunct) online game and the sequel graphic novels). Still, some fans are disappointed that he didn't appear in the show itself.
- Aang's old Fire Nation friend Kuzon. Though he was most likely dead by the time of the show, it is a shame that we never really learn anything about him. This becomes especially annoying in Season 3 where the Gaang visit the Fire Nation, giving us the perfect opportunity to learn more about him including his friendship with Aang, his role in the war, and his possible connection to Zuko (due to their similar names and the fact that Aang compared the two). Word of God originally stated that Kuzon would play an important role in a Season 3 episode, but this unfortunately never came to be, though he does appear in a flashback in the comic "Dragon Days"
- Azula's elderly advisors/instructors Lo and Li originally seemed to be Azula's equivalents to Zuko's Iroh only much colder in personality. Come Season 3, their role becomes more comical and it's revealed that they aren't even firebenders which makes no sense considering that it was implied that they were her firebending instructors.
- Chit Sang was an interesting character who briefly joined the group along with Hakoda midway through Season 3 only to leave the following episode without a single line of dialogue!
- Haru and Hakoda are competent warriors in their own right, but are shelved just before the Grand Finale.
- Combustion Man is a menacing figure with unique firebending abilities and was hyped to be a major antagonist for the final season. However, other than acting as a somewhat arbitrary plot device to help Zuko earn Aang's trust, his relevance to the main story is minimal. He does not have any lines, his true name is never revealed and he is only fought in two filler episodes before dying in his final appearance.
- Chey, the Fire Nation explosives expert and second man to desert them and live is only in one episode, and has a minimal, somewhat comic relief, role in it.
- Jee, the captain of Zuko's ship never reappearing after Zuko becomes a fugitive, when that could have had a good sense of conflicting loyalty. He also feels wasted for not appearing in the siege of the North as a potential voice of reason.
- Some fans wish June the Bounty Hunter had showed up chasing the Gang and/or Zuko at certain points between the two episodes in which she appeared.
- Shyu, the one Fire Sage who remains loyal to the Avatar, is in just one episode and then is never referenced again outside of a comic.
- Xin Fu and Master Yu seemed like they would become recurring antagonists in Season 2. They were only seen two more times and their role was greatly rushed at the end of the season. Furthermore, Xin Fu's plan to capture Aang for the Fire Lord seemed to have been thrown out.
- Haru, Teo, and The Duke, despite having escaped with the Gaang following the Day of Black Sun never partake in any adventures with them and are often shooed away to focus on the main characters, even though having a second earthbender, an inventor's son who's skilled at gliding, and a kid familiar with guerilla warfare would've opened the door for all sorts of interesting stories.
- The Rough Rhinos were a band of Elite Mooks that appeared a few times in Book 2. They were never actually defeated or dealt with by Team Avatar, having been driven off by Team Avatar and then Zuko and Iroh. Much later on, they were revealed to have been the band of Firebenders who destroyed Jet's village, giving them some attachment to his character. While they did appear in the comics, it would've been nice to see them have more encounters with the good guys. Most likely, the writers figured that Azula was the more interesting villain and so decided to focus on her instead of splitting the antagonists too early.
- They Wasted a Perfectly Good Plot:
- Iroh's entire past, including his journey to the Spirit World, has left fans with many questions, yet has never been touched upon in the show itself (although some of it was alluded to in supplementary books).
- Before Season 3 aired, it was said that Zuko would begin searching for his mother in the season. Guess what never happened. (Thankfully, it was covered in the graphic novels.)
- Koh ominously told Aang that they would meet again. This never happened onscreen.
- The whole mistaken-kidnapping plot around Toph was resolved off-screen, including the revelation to the Gaang that she had lied about joining them.
- Everything involving bloodbending. Despite only being the focus of a single episode, its horrific nature and backstory make it one of the most memorable plot points of Book 3. It wasn't until The Legend of Korra that the concept was explored to its true potential.
- Trans Audience Interpretation: Smellerbee is frequently headcannoned as a trans girl, in particular due to one scene in the episode "The Serpent's Pass". She is offended and storms off after Iroh assumes she's a boy (for which he apologizes, he is Iroh after all). Longshot follows her off and gives her a look that convinces her that "it doesn't matter what others think, as long as [she] knows [that she's a girl]." This overlaps with Does This Remind You of Anything?
- Unpopular Popular Character:
- Zuko has been banished for speaking out in his father's meeting, burned by said father, and until Book 3, is given no respect from anyone in the fire nation, aside from his uncle and crew. He is also one of the most popular characters in the franchise thanks to his tragic backstory and sheer determination.
- The Cabbage Merchant is always getting his cabbage stand wrecked, and nobody seems to care very much about it. To the fans, he became very iconic due to the comedic nature of the Running Gag and his memorable "MY CABBAGES!" Catchphrase. The live-action series drew notable praise when it was revealed James Sie would reprise his role as the Cabbage Merchant with physical acting.
- Values Dissonance: While the use of white actors playing the Inuit-looking Sokka and Katara was one of many criticisms in The Last Airbender, this show also fell into this by casting white actors Jack DeSena and Mae Whitman. Nowadays, it's generally expected that nonwhite characters be portrayed by nonwhite actors, as with the Netflix live-action series.
- Values Resonance: The series' message on the horrors of wars, imperialism, and authoritarianism—not to mention how easily seemingly benign society can slip towards these trends, be it Fire Nation's transformation into warmongering colonialist or Ba Sing Se's enforced ignorance of the war among its citizens—to everyone remained relevant even after the show's broadcast. Furthermore, the show also shows how said society can redeem itself when people are willing to stand up to wrongdoers.
- Viewer Gender Confusion:
- Smellerbee has an androgynous appearance and wears masculine clothes, but is actually a girl. Her gender is only revealed when Iroh questions her feminine name in "The Serpent's Pass", after which she immediately takes offense at his mistake.
- Because of his name, Nyla (June's shirshu) is often mistaken for a female. Doesn't help that he's only referred to with a pronoun once.
- What Do You Mean, It's for Kids?: While it seems to be geared primarily towards the elementary- to early-middle-school set, it does boast its fair share of horror, and, especially in the third season, it deals with a series of very heavy themes. The Protagonist is the lone survivor of a genocide during which an entire culture was completely wiped out, and the 100-Year War seems to not have spared a single family from losing relatives in combat or war crimes. The Starter Villain and Deuteragonist is the victim of absolutely horrific child abuse from his own father that the series depicts without pulling any punches and is always Played for Drama. Ba Sing Se is an Orwellian dystopia where people who threaten to break its fragile illusion of peace are kidnapped by a Secret Police and brainwashed. Some episodes in the third season even deal with an assassin hired to kill the protagonists and one of the heroes setting out to kill the murderer of her mother.
